Economic Opportunities for Indigenous Peoples in Latin America : Conference Edition

Indigenous peoples make up less than 5 percent of the world's population, yet comprise 15 percent of the world's poor. The indigenous population of Latin America is estimated at 28 million. Despite significant changes in poverty overall, the proportion of indigenous peoples in the region living in poverty - at almost 80 percent - did not change much from the early 1990s to the early 2000s. Economic Opportunities for Indigenous Peoples in Latin America moves beyond earlier work which focused primarily on human development, and looks at the distribution and returns to income generating assets - physical and human capital, public assets and social capital - and the affect these have on income generation strategies. Low income and low assets are mutually reinforcing. Low education levels translate into low income, resulting in poor health and reduced schooling of future generations. Low assets not only reduce the ability to generate income, they also hinder the capacity to insure against shocks, thus increasing vulnerability. This is especially true when coupled with missing credit and insurance markets. There are significant complementarities across assets, which imply that the returns to one asset depend on access to another. These synergies between assets accumulate the disadvantages of the asset-poor in terms of returns to income-generating activities. They also dictate policies that facilitate access not only to one key productive asset, such as land, but also to complementary assets, such as training and infrastructure, which affect the returns to land.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Patrinos, Harry Anthony, Skoufias, Emmanuel
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC : World Bank 2007
Subjects:ACCULTURATION, AGRICULTURAL SECTOR, AGRICULTURAL WORKERS, AGRICULTURE, ANTI-POVERTY, BASIC NEEDS, CAPITAL THEORY, CAPITALIZATION, CITIES, COLONIALISM, CULTURAL DIFFERENCES, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DISCRIMINATION, DISEQUILIBRIUM, DISSEMINATION, DRUGS, DUAL ECONOMY, EARNING ASSETS, ECONOMIC CONDITIONS, ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY, ECONOMIC OUTCOMES, ECONOMIC STATUS, ECONOMIC THEORY, EDUCATION, EMPLOYMENT, EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES, ETHNIC RELATIONS, EXPORTS, EXTERNALITIES, FAMILY INCOME, FAMILY MEMBERS, FAMILY RESOURCES, FARMERS, FORMAL EDUCATION, FUTURE GENERATIONS, FUTURE RESEARCH, HEALTH, HEALTH INSURANCE, HEALTH SERVICES, HIGHER INCIDENCE OF POVERTY, HOUSEHOLD SURVEY, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, HOUSING, HUMAN CAPITAL, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, HUMAN RIGHTS, IDENTITY, ILLNESS, IMMIGRANTS, INCIDENCE OF POVERTY, INCOME-GENERATING ACTIVITIES, INDIGENOUS GROUPS, INDIGENOUS PEOPLE, INDIGENOUS PEOPLES, INDIGENOUS POPULATIONS, INEFFICIENCY, INEQUALITY, INSURANCE MARKETS, INTEREST RATES, INTERNATIONAL LABOR ORGANIZATION, INTERNATIONAL LAW, KINSHIP, KINSHIP NETWORKS, LABOR FORCE, LABOR MARKET, LACK OF CREDIT, LACK OF INFRASTRUCTURE, LAND ASSETS, LAND OWNERSHIP, LAND RIGHTS, LAND TITLING, LANDHOLDINGS, LAWS, LEVEL OF EDUCATION, LEVELS OF EDUCATION, LIVING CONDITIONS, LIVING STANDARDS, MARGINAL VALUE, MIGRANT, MIGRATION, MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS, MOTHER, MULTIPLIER EFFECTS, NORMS, NUTRITION, POOR, POOR HEALTH, POOR HOUSEHOLDS, POOR INFRASTRUCTURE, POSITIVE EFFECTS, POVERTY GAP, POVERTY PROGRAMS, POVERTY RATES, POVERTY REDUCTION, PRIVATE PROPERTY, PRODUCT MARKETS, PRODUCTIVITY, PROGRESS, PROPERTY RIGHTS, PUBLIC POLICY, PUBLIC SERVICES, QUALITY OF EDUCATION, REMITTANCES, ROLE MODELS, RUNNING WATER, RURAL, RURAL AREAS, RURAL COMMUNITIES, RURAL ORGANIZATIONS, RURAL ROADS, SANITATION, SCHOOL ATTENDANCE, SCHOOL STUDENTS, SELF-CONFIDENCE, SERVICE PROVIDER, SKILLED WORKERS, SMALLHOLDERS, SOCIAL ASSISTANCE, SOCIAL INTERACTIONS, SOCIAL MOBILITY, SOCIAL NETWORKS, SOCIAL PRESSURE, SOCIAL SPENDING, SOCIETIES, SOCIETY, SPILLOVER, SUSTAINABLE RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, TRADITIONAL PRACTICES, TRADITIONAL VALUES, TRANSPORTATION, URBAN AREAS, URBAN ENVIRONMENTS, VULNERABILITY, WAGE DISCRIMINATION, WAGES, WEALTH, WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION, YOUNG CHILDREN,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/01/7514413/economic-opportunities-indigenous-peoples-latin-america
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8019
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!